Latgale Trip V3 -

Inside, V3’s first discovery: a room dedicated to . Not the polite folk pottery of tourism brochures, but fierce, glazed figures – horses with human eyes, demons with three heads, jugs shaped like pregnant women. A sign reads: “Keramika – runājošais māls” (Ceramics – speaking clay). I buy a small bowl, unglazed on the outside, cobalt-blue within. The vendor, an elderly man with one tooth and two world wars in his posture, says: “Tas ir Latgale. Smags ārpusē, dziļš iekšpusē.” (Hard on the outside, deep inside.)

This is the account of 120 hours in Latgale, October 2026. A journey by diesel train, rented bicycle, and foot. A journey into the blue-grey. Rīga’s central station at 6:47 AM. The train to Rēzekne – the region’s unofficial capital – is an electric marvel by EU standards, but inside, the spirit is Soviet: worn velvet seats, windows that fog with collective breath, a samovār (tea boiler) that gurgles like a dying accordion. I choose a compartment with a Latgalian grandmother crocheting doilies. She doesn’t speak Latvian – only Latgalian and Russian. I understand one word: “ezeri” (lakes). latgale trip v3

Built by Tsar Alexander I after Napoleon’s invasion. Never saw a single shot fired in anger. Instead, it became a prison, a barracks, a concentration camp (first for Poles, then for Jews), then a Soviet garrison, then a museum. Walking the ramparts at 9 AM, alone except for a stray dog, I feel the weight of nested tragedies. A plaque in three languages: “Here, in 1941, 1,400 Jews were held before execution. Among them: children.” Inside, V3’s first discovery: a room dedicated to

Rēzekne is often dismissed as grey, post-industrial, forgotten. V3 forced me to look again. The city’s heart is the – a towering, brutalist-symbolist sculpture of a woman holding a cross, erected in 1939 and defiantly restored after Soviet neglect. She stands on a hill overlooking the railway yards. From her feet, you see the real Rēzekne: not the crumbling factories, but the wooden houses with sky-blue shutters, the Orthodox church with a green dome, and – crucially – the new Latgale Culture and History Museum (reopened 2025 after a decade of renovation). I buy a small bowl, unglazed on the

An elder named Timofei invites me into his izba. He serves sbiten (a honey-spice tea) and shows me a handwritten prayer book from 1789. He asks: “Why do you come here, to the end of the road?” I say: “To understand slowness.” He nods. “Then you must stay three days. One day is curiosity. Three days is truth.”